| Literature DB >> 27610215 |
Giacomo Vivanti1, Darren R Hocking2, Peter Fanning3, Cheryl Dissanayake3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and those with Williams syndrome (WS) have difficulties with learning, though the nature of these remains unclear.Entities:
Keywords: Autism; Imitation; Learning; Social cognition; Social learning; Williams syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27610215 PMCID: PMC5015226 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-016-0101-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Participant characteristics
| ASD ( | WS ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender, M, F | 34, 2 | 11,10 | – |
| Chron. age (months): M (SD) | 45.53 (11.21) | 52.55 (17.22) | .10 |
| MSEL visual reception AE: M (SD) | 26.74 (11.37) | 29.17 (16.29) | .57 |
| MSEL fine motor AE: M (SD) | 25.35 (8.63) | 24.83 (10.10) | .85 |
| MSEL receptive lang. AE: M (SD) | 20.38 (10.30) | 27.67 (14.60) | .07 |
| MSEL expressive lang. AE: M (SD) | 23.38 (10.65) | 26.61 (13.69) | .39 |
| MSEL visual reception T: M (SD) | 30.12 (10.10) | 24.13 (7.15) | .22 |
| MSEL fine motor T: M (SD) | 28.18 (13.42) | 21.86 (3.68) | .08 |
| MSEL receptive lang. T: M (SD) | 28.03 (14.41) | 25.47 (9.53) | .53 |
| MSEL expressive lang. T: M (SD) | 30.27 (15.77) | 24.00 (7.24) | .15 |
| MSEL total DQ: M (SD) | 62.93 (27.99) | 56.44 (16.88) | .34 |
| VABS communication: M (SD) | 71.81 (18.98) | 70.57 (11.65) | .79 |
| VABS daily living skills: M (SD) | 72.59 (27.20) | 70.43 (11.43) | .73 |
| VABS socialization: M (SD) | 72.50 (14.69) | 80.81 (12.53) | .03 |
| VABS motor skills: M (SD) | 75.09 (19.32) | 68.86 (11.00) | .14 |
| VABS composite: M (SD) | 69.81 (19.14) | 69.86 (10.08) | .99 |
| ADOS severity score: M (SD) | 7.45 (1.88) |
ASD autism spectrum disorder, WS Williams syndrome, MSEL Mullen Scales of Early Learning, VABS Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales, Second Edition; ADOS Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, AE Age Equivalent, T T score
Fig. 1Imitation performance (proportion of imitated actions) in experiment 1 *p = .001
Summary of learning performance across experiments
| Experiment | Learning source | Learning function | Learning performancea—M(SD) | Group differences | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ASD | WS | ||||
| 1 | Neutral model—live | Social | 19.09 (23.23) | 29.86 (28.16) | .01b |
| Playful model—live | Social | 23.61 (23.67) | 46.52 (23.40) | ||
| 2 | Neutral model—video-recorded | Social | 35.00 (40.31) | 52.63 (40.73) | .61b |
| Playful model—video-recorded | Social | 42.85 (35.62) | 64.37 (34.67) | ||
| 3 | Neutral model—video-recorded | Instrumental | 55.55 (32.23) | 62.77 (33.87) | .42c |
| 4 | Own trials and errors | Instrumental | 11.28 (28.46) | 21.95 (21.55) | .20c |
aLearning performance indicates average proportion of imitated actions in experiments 1, 2, and 3, and average improvement over time from first to last object presentation (expressed in a percentage score) in experiment 4
b2 (group; ASD, WS) × 2 (condition; neutral, playful) ANOVA group × condition interaction
cBetween-group t test
Fig. 2Playful model (left) and the neutral model (right) in experiment 2 video stimuli
Fig. 3Average duration of fixations to the model’s face (experiment 2) *p = .005
Fig. 4Example of video stimulus in experiment 3
Experiment 3, average duration of fixations to the areas of interest
| Area of interest | Group |
|
| Cohen’s | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ASD | WS | ||||
| Model’s face | 1.36 (.83) | 1.36 (.77) | −.01 | .98 | .00 |
| Model’s action | 3.71 (1.57) | 4.39 (1.29) | −1.65 | .10 | −.47 |
ASD autism spectrum disorder, WS Williams syndrome
Fig. 5Number of errors in the first, second, and third object presentation in experiment 4